Olympians Michael Hixon (Amherst, Mass./Indiana University), Jessica Parratto (Dover, N.H./Indiana University) and Katrina Young (Shoreline, Wash./Florida State University Diving Team) will all be in attendance at the 2017 USA Diving Winter National Championships, set to take place in Greensboro, N.C., December 13-19.

The penultimate leg of the FINA Diving Grand Prix 2017 drew to a close on Sunday November 5, as local heroes , Mark and Timothy Lee scored exactly 366 points to finish in third place in the men’s 3m synchro behind the Republic of Korea’s Kim Yeongnam and Woo Haram (438.18), and Russia’s Vlacheslav Novoselov and Evgenii Novoselov (396.90).

China, Japan, Korea and Malaysia were the four nations climbing on the first step of the podium this weekend in Kuala Lumpur (MAS), where the sixth leg of the annual FINA Diving Grand Prix was taking place from October 27-29.

FINA, the international governing body for 6 disciplines of aquatics sports, has put forth a proposal to add high diving to the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo, Japan.

High diving, which FINA considers a different discipline from the more traditional indoor, springboard and platform diving, involves divers leaping from heights over twice as high. A standard high diving apparatus incliudes a 5-meter platform, a 10-meter platform, a 20-meter platform (the women’s standard competition height) and a 27-meter platform (the men’s standard competition height). At impact, divers are traveling over 50 miles per hour – so the dives are all feet-first, rather than head-first.

The discipline was added already to the 2013 FINA World Aquatics Championships offering and is contested at the wildly-popular Red Bull Cliff Diving series.

FINA made the announcement of their request at the start of the 4th edition of the FINA High Diving World Cup in Abu Dhabi this week.

If the IOC approaches high diving as a new sport, rather than an added discipline to regular diving, then it would first need to receive as a sport by the IOC. Many sports receive recognition but are not competed at the Olympics – like bowling and chess.

The IOC can then choose to admit it to the Olympics as either a sport, a discipline (branch of a sport), or an event.

FINA’s biggest challenge to overcome would be the Olympic Charter standards of inclusion. According to that charter, to be accepted, that sport must be “widely practiced” by men in at least 75 countries on 4 continents and by women in 40 countries on 3 continents.

High diving would likely clear most of the other hurdles. It would have to increase the “value and appeal” of the Olympic Games, which crowds at the cliff-diving series indicate it would; and must not be a purely “mind sport” or dependent on mechanical propulsion.

On balance, high diving’s only route to the Olympics at present would be as an added event or discipline (as they referred to it several times in their announcement), but even then, the IOC would likely challenge FINA to prove it as a truly-global competition. At the 2015 World Aquatics Championships, only 20 men from 12 countries and 10 women from 7 countries competed.

The full announcement, courtesy Pedro Adrega, Head of FINA’s Communications Department, is below:

The FINA Executive Director Cornel Marculescu announced it officially at the opening Press Conference of the 4th edition of the FINA High Diving World Cup in Abu Dhabi (UAE): our International Federation has formally requested the IOC to include this spectacular discipline in the programme of the 2020 Tokyo Games. “This is an extreme sport and will certainly bring an added value to the Olympic programme. Since the introduction of High Diving in the FINA programme, in 2013, the evolution has been amazing, and the moment has come to go further”, considered Mr. Marculescu.

At his side, one of the most experienced high divers of the circuit, Great Britain’s Gary Hunt was naturally happy. “This is a great opportunity for our sport. If we are successful, we will definitively have an exciting time in Tokyo 2020. Moreover, it will give the important visibility the sport needs”, confessed Hunt, the 2015 world champion.

In a day of training at the Yas Island venue, where the competition is taking place this Friday and Saturday, FINA spoke with several other stars on this important step forward. Jonathan Paredes, from Mexico, is evidently thrilled. At 27, he is emphatic: “We must fight for it! If there is a possibility, we must go and take it! Is this becomes official, a lot more countries will start having athletes in High Diving. Don’t forget that China (very strong in pool diving) is still not present in our discipline…” says the Mexican with a smile.

Bronze medallist at the 2013 FINA World Championships, Paredes adds another dimension to this possible inclusion in the Olympic programme.

“This would generate an additional respect for our discipline. When we started within FINA, four years ago in Barcelona, we were a kind of ‘circus’ artists, a bunch of crazy people. Now, within Aquatics, this perception has widely changed, so I think that the Olympic factor could give the definitive value to High Diving to the general world”.

Positive image

His friend Orlando Duque, an icon from Colombia, perhaps the world’s most known face in this discipline, is also optimistic concerning the Tokyo 2020 horizon.

“It’s a dream for all of us for many years now! Every athlete’s aspiration is to be able to participate in the Olympics one day. People say High Diving is a very dangerous sport, but for the ones that are within the sport we know that we can control those challenges. We have now a good image and the entry in the FINA programme definitively helped a lot”, explains the Colombian, first FINA world champion in 2013.

The universality of countries practicing the sport being one of the main criteria for Olympic inclusion, Duque underlines that while in the men’s field there is already a variety of athletes and nations, the women’s field “is still a bit short”. But this could rapidly change: “There are many girls on the starting blocks. If the Olympic dream becomes a reality, I am sure we can have some more women with a good level until Tokyo 2020”. Born in 1974, the Colombian could be 45 at the times of Games in Japan. “Why not? If until there Colombia does not have a strong team, capable of fighting for medals, I may still compete. It’s not a madness to participate in the Games with 45 years old – if Colombia is good then, I’ll step aside, if not, I could be in”, concludes Duque.

“I’m crossing fingers”Lysanne Richard, from Canada, winner of the 2016 World Cup also in Abu Dhabi, was evidently a happy woman. “Great, great, and again great! I am crossing my fingers for that! This would be the best tribute to so many athletes that gave so much to our sport. I think on Duque, I thing on Ginger Huber, from USA”, confessed the Canadian star.

At 35, this mother of three, clearly indicates the added value of this discipline in the Olympic programme. “The courage and perseverance are important qualities in our society. I think high divers have those two attributes. We need that in life, to face the danger and believe in yourself”, she considers.

Asked about the quantity of women at high-level competitions, Richard gives her native Québec province as an example. “For a couple of years now, we are organising some competitions in 10m, where athletes must enter with the feet first. If they reach a reasonable level, they then can dive from a higher height. This is something aimed at girls aged 14 and more, and is having a great success in Québec. Another thing we are doing there is that we are sometimes adding a mini-trampoline on top of the 10m board to allow additional rotation for the dives”, she explains. Then, pointing out to the tower here in Abu Dhabi, she adds: “Another idea could be to maintain these structures a bit longer in the organising cities of high diving events. Not only building them for the two of three competition days, but to keep them some months and generate some national interest”.

“Good time to push forward”Ginger Huber, cited by Lysanne Richard, is the oldest competitor in the women’s field. As with Duque, she is presently 42 years old, but always competing for medals at the highest level. “My feeling? Happiness! High Diving is now very popular. It’s definitively a good time to push forward”, admits the US star, third at the 2016 World Cup. “We are becoming a very international sport – look at the number of countries represented here, 17. Concerning the women’s participation, I believe many of them would come to the sport if they could. If the Olympics will happen for us, it will surely be a cause for further development”, she says.

Huber then presents a very philosophical approach on the added value that the discipline could bring to the Games. “I see it as the Games in Ancient Greece. Athletes then were like gods, they were performing extraordinary things, very few could do what they do. I am not saying we are gods, but very few can do what we are doing. If you take swimming, there are thousands of athletes, with high diving it’s just a restricted group of competitors capable of doing it”.

As with Duque, the age factor doesn’t refrain Huber. “Yes, I would also be 45. But if this is a reality, it would help keeping the flame lit. I am not sure I could go, but I would definitively love to go! I take things as they come, so if I am strong enough, I could try…”

They should add the ultra marathon and tied leg running.
Also ballet dancing should be added. Cool stuff. All sports should be added including snookers, chess, billards and darts. Is squash at the Olympics?

The Olympics should be 2 or 3 months long to make room for all sports. The more the merrier.

About Braden Keith

Braden Keith is the Editor-in-Chief and a co-founder of SwimSwam.com.
He first got his feet wet by building The Swimmers' Circle beginning in January 2010, and now comes to SwimSwam to use that experience and help build a new leader in the sport of swimming.
Aside from his life on the InterWet, …